Category Archives: May Day

Hal an Tow

Floraday

In Cornwall today in the town of Helston a large bass drum will sound at 7 AM. The drum marks the start of the Furry Dance, an ancient processional through the city. “Hal an Tow” is the song you’ll hear throughout the day as the dance winds through Helston’s streets and buildings.

It has been thus for hundreds of years each 8th of May, unless the 8th happens to fall on a Sunday or Monday, and if it does, then the procession is moved to the Saturday before. The houses and shops are decorated abundantly with flowers, for Flora Day marks the official end of winter, the welcoming of summer.

I found a fine smokey pub performance of “Hal an Tow” for you recorded in 1965 by The Watersons. You can view it here. And when you do, you can sing along if you know the main words:

Hal an Tow!
Jolly rumba low!
We were up
Long before the day-o!
To welcome in the summer,
To welcome in the May-o!
For summer is a comin’ in
And winter’s gone away-o!

 

Your May Book of Days

May

It’s May Day today! Most often May Day gifts take the form of floral nosegays. In this case, our gift to you is the Convivio Book of Days Calendar for May. This month’s cover star is historic wood type from our collection.

Fun fact: Turns out when you set “M A Y” in wood type, you can do so and photograph it and use it without need to flip the image in Photoshop for it to read correctly (at least when you set in in caps). It’s the only month of the year that offers this benefit, and so we took advantage of it.

We’re also on Instagram now, for the past month. The images so far seem to favor circles, rectangles, felines, and a general muted earthiness. Go figure. Perhaps we’ll focus on finding something bright red to photograph next. You can find us there under the name conviviobookworks.

Happy May!

 

 

Summer is a Comin’ In

Valborg_vid_Ringsjön_2008

It’s the end of April, the start of May, and by traditional reckoning of time, the start of summer. I know, it snowed in New England not all that long ago. That may be one reason why Americans are generally not all that excited about the series of holidays that we enter into tonight in our yearly round. Be that as it may, tonight brings Walpurgis Night, or May Eve, which brings in May Day tomorrow. The Puritans may have had something to do with our ambivalence, too: they really despised holidays of this nature (well… holidays in general), which were a little too close to our Pagan roots.

In Pagan tradition, it is Beltane, and here, too, the wheel of the year makes its shift from spring to summer. With Beltane, we are at the opposite side of the wheel from Samhain as October shifts to November. Samhain welcomes winter; Beltane welcomes summer.

A good menu for your dinner tonight might include gravlax, thinly sliced cured salmon served with dill and mustard. It’s often served on dark rye bread, so it is much like that open face sandwich I often buy at the Finnish bakery nearby in Lantana, which is comprised of dark rye bread spread with a mustardy sauce, sliced hard boiled eggs, and then smoked salmon, garnished with fresh dill. (I’ve found that this delicacy does not appeal to a lot of people; my partner Seth is a hard sell, for instance. But gravlax and that Finnish sandwich both taste better than you and Seth may think.)

It’s also traditional to include quantities of sparkling wine in your Walpurgis Night celebration. And, as is the case with many of these nights that bring a shift in season, it is customary to light a bonfire. We heartily believe that even small manifestations of these things (a candle and smoked fish dip and saltines… why not?) places you in the proper spirit should you not be quite up to a bonfire and gravlax.

We are, officially or not, at the gentler time of year. It is a time of light and of warmth. Summer is indeed a comin’ in; we welcome it with open arms. Go on: Welcome summer. Bring in the May!

 

Image: Svenska: Valborgsbrasa i Gamla Bo vid Ringsjön. Photograph by David Castor, 2008, [Public domain] via Wikimedia Commons.